The conquest of nature :
water, landscape, and the making of modern Germany /
David Blackbourn.
Description
- Language(s)
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English
- Published
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London : Jonathan Cape, 2006.
- Summary
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Explores how, over the last 250 years, the German people have shaped their natural environment and how the landscapes they created took a powerful hold on the German imagination. It investigates how the most fundamental element--water-- was "conquered" by draining fens and marshes, straightening the courses of rivers, building high dams and exploiting hydro-electric power. The book begins in the 1740s with Frederick the Great of Prussia, who regarded the reclamation of marshland as "conquests from barbarism". We meet Johann Gottfried Tulla, "the man who tamed the wild Rhine" in the nineteenth century. We learn about the construction of the Prussian port of Wilhelmshaven on the Jade Bay, later to become a symbol of the new Germany's naval ambitions. We witness the colonisation of the moors and the triumph of the steamship. We encounter Otto Intze, "master dambuilder" of the years around 1900, whose modern marvels supplied drinking water to a fast-growing population and provided hydro-electrical power. The modern idea of "₁mastery" over nature always had its critics, whether their motives were aesthetic, religious or environmentalist. Germany's defeat in 1945 brought renewed attachment to an idealised natural landscape. This persisted as a conservative reproach through the ensuing "economic miracle", which caused major problems of pollution and environmental destruction. It was in the 1970s, however, that protecting the environment became a central part of the West German political agenda and soon began to show results.
- Physical Description
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497 p. :
ill. ;
24 cm.
- ISBN
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0224060716 (hbk.)
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